It's the fall canning season

Although ABC and media buyers are crowing about the performance of its Tuesday-night schedule, it was the first network to announce cancellations last week, showing that it still has plenty of work to do on the rest of its schedule.

The Ratings Race

Broadcast nets' rating/share

Sept. 30-Oct. 6

Adults 18-49

Households

Source: Nielsen Media Research

NBC

5.1/14

CBS

8.8/15

CBS

4.1/12

NBC

8.4/14

ABC

3.7/10

ABC

6.2/10

Fox

3.0/8

Fox

5.5/9

WB

2.2/6

WB

3.2/6

UPN

1.8/5

UPN

2.6/4

Getting the ax is ABC's Push, Nevada
on Thursday nights at 9 p.m. ET. It will get its last airing on Oct. 24, right before the sweeps. Also gone, at least for now, is the network's That Was Then, on Friday nights at 9 p.m., which ABC stuck in the "hiatus" netherworld after only two airings. Analysts are wondering how long ABC will be able to support medical show MDs, on Wednesday nights at 9 p.m., which is getting battered by NBC's ratings powerhouse, Law & Order.

"ABC's ratings are still down over last year because their bads are outweighing their goods," says Sam Armando, media director, broadcast research group, at Starcom Worldwide. "Push
and That Was Then
were really pulling them down."

To fill the hole on Thursdays, ABC will run the two-hour pilot of Monk
on Thursday, Oct. 31, and then fill the slot with to-be-determined special programming through November. ABC will move Monk
to its new time slot, Mondays at 8 p.m., beginning Nov. 18.

The Drew Carey Show
and Whose Line Is It Anyway?, which now air Mondays at 8 p.m. and 8:30 p.m., respectively, will move to Fridays as of Nov. 8, replacing That Was Then.

Regarding the switch, ABC Entertainment President Susan Lyne says: "That Was Then
was a good show in a bad time period. We have six remaining episodes that we fully anticipate trying in a different time slot later on."

Lyne also says Push
viewers still can compete for the million-dollar-plus grand prize after ABC airs the seventh episode. The network will post revised rules on ABC.com.

Conversely, ABC has purchased full-season orders for the John Ritter comedy, 8 Simple Rules for Dating My Teenage Daughter, Life With Bonnie
and Less Than Perfect, all of which are turning in strong performances for the network in key demos on Tuesday nights.

Otherwise, NBC is struggling on Tuesdays from 8 to 9 p.m. with last week's seventh-season premiere of Just Shoot Me
placing fourth in households and fifth in adults 18-49, performing even below last year's ill-fated Emeril. Dennis Farina's In-Laws
at 8:30 p.m. didn't do much better, coming in fourth in households and third in adults 18-49.

Viewers came back to NBC for Frasier
at 9 p.m., which took first in the key ratings categories, and Hidden Hills
at 9:30 p.m. retained enough of that audience to win the key adult demos.

Through Oct. 6, CBS is winning the race in households with an 8.9 rating/15 share to NBC's 8.6/14, while NBC is hanging on to its lead in adults 18-49 with a 5.2/14 to CBS's 4.3/12.

Elsewhere on the schedule, though having a tough year overall, UPN is happy enough with the performance of new comedy Half & Half
on Monday night that it purchased a full-season order of the show, which airs at 9:30 p.m., to finish up a comedy lineup that includes The Parkers, One on One
and Girlfriends.